Jonathan Rivett is a writer based in Melbourne. He's written about workplace culture and careers for more than a decade.
The culture and politics of your team is genuinely strange; the sudden and barely explained departures are illustrative of that.
A good recruiter would have put their consternation aside and sought to understand why you seemingly ignored their advice, rather than blowing up at you.
It’s so often the case: what seems at first blush to be a trivial matter at work ends up being the situation that threatens to pull a team apart.
Just because this open role has a whiff of fait accompli about it, I wouldn’t necessarily say that you should pull out of the interview.
Nobody wants to let a good job pass them by simply because a recruiter or hiring team lacked polish, but being wary is also worthwhile.
Often, sticking up for yourself (and others) at work is critical, especially if the situation works as a kind of test case or creates a precedent.
Most workers today are unlikely to be aware that union members take home a median of $251 more a week than non-unionised workers.
When a prospective employer asks about whether you’ve been subject to any formal process, they’re generally interested in misconduct or wrongdoing.
If the advice you received was reflective of what needs to be in a modern-day job application, goodness help us all.
Brought on thanks to the pandemic, this new work from home trend could go a long way towards improving your work/life balance.